Michael Cohen says on secretly recorded phone call he didn’t commit some of the crimes he pleaded guilty to

Michael Cohen, former attorney and fixer for President Trump, told comedian Tom Arnold on a recent phone call that he didn't commit some of the crimes he pleaded guilty to. (The Asahi Shimbun/The Asahi Shimbun via Getty Imag)

Michael Cohen, the prison-bound former personal attorney to President Trump, walked back parts of his guilty plea on a secretly recorded phone call released Wednesday, claiming he only copped to it to protect his wife.

Cohen, who’s set to start serving a three-year sentence on May 6, made the confession to Roseanne Barr’s ex-hubby, Tom Arnold, who provided a recording of the call to The Wall Street Journal. Arnold told the newspaper that Cohen wasn’t aware he recorded their March 25 chat.

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Specifically, Cohen denied committing tax evasion and a financial crime related to his home equity line of credit — both of which were included in his plea agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s office in Manhattan.

“There’s no tax evasion. And the HELOC?” Cohen says on the call, using an acronym for home equity line of credit. “I have an 18% loan to value on my home. How could there be a HELOC issue. How? Right? It’s a lie.”

The ex-Trump fixer suggested to Arnold that he only pleaded to those crimes because he didn’t want his wife to possibly get caught up in the matter.

Cohen, 52, acknowledged on the call that he committed the campaign finances crimes he pleaded guilty to for paying off porn star Stormy Daniels on Trump’s behalf after she threatened to go public with allegations she had sex with the president over a decade ago.

However, Cohen argued that shouldn’t mean he had to lose “everything.”

“I mean everything,” Cohen told Arnold. “My family’s happiness, my law license. I lost my business, my insurance, my bank accounts, all for what? All for what? Because Trump, you know, had an affair with a porn star.”

Lanny Davis, who serves as Cohen’s attorney, told the Daily News that “nothing” Cohen told Arnold contradicts what the former Trump fixer’s attorney Guy Petrillo said in his sentencing memo to Manhattan Federal Court Judge William Pauley last year.

Davis declined to comment when asked to clarify how Cohen’s phone call denial doesn’t contradict his guilty plea. Instead, Davis pointed to special counsel Robert Mueller.

“I would also add the important words used by special counsel Robert Mueller, and others, in describing Michael Cohen’s cooperation and testimony as ‘credible’ addressing the ‘core’ issues involved in his investigation,” Davis said.

A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in Manhattan declined to comment.